Obama Camp: Clinton Foreign Policy A Dramatized Assertion, Clinton Calls His Iraq Plan "Just Words"

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First Posted: 03-11-08 09:26 AM   |   Updated: 03-28-08 02:46 AM

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Clinton Scary

The Obama campaign has released an exhaustive memo on Hillary Clinton's foreign policy experience. They argue that Sen. Clinton's claim that she has passed a Commander-in-Chief threshold is "mere assertion, dramatized in a scary television commercial." They also detail each of the foreign policy situations -- Northern Ireland, Bosnia, Kosovo, Rwanda and China -- that Sen. Clinton has mentioned during the campaign.

Meanwhile, Sen. Clinton has sought to preempt a scheduled environment speech for Obama today. Co-opting his phrase, she calls both his environmental policy and his promise to withdraw from Iraq "just words."

Read Obama's memo (Clinton statement below):

To: Interested Parties From: Greg Craig, former director, Policy Planning Office, U.S. State Department RE: Senator Clinton's claim to be experienced in foreign policy: Just words? DA: March 11, 2008

When your entire campaign is based upon a claim of experience, it is important that you have evidence to support that claim. Hillary Clinton's argument that she has passed "the Commander- in-Chief test" is simply not supported by her record.

There is no doubt that Hillary Clinton played an important domestic policy role when she was First Lady. It is well known, for example, that she led the failed effort to pass universal health insurance. There is no reason to believe, however, that she was a key player in foreign policy at any time during the Clinton Administration. She did not sit in on National Security Council meetings. She did not have a security clearance. She did not attend meetings in the Situation Room. She did not manage any part of the national security bureaucracy, nor did she have her own national security staff. She did not do any heavy-lifting with foreign governments, whether they were friendly or not. She never managed a foreign policy crisis, and there is no evidence to suggest that she participated in the decision-making that occurred in connection with any such crisis. As far as the record shows, Senator Clinton never answered the phone either to make a decision on any pressing national security issue - not at 3 AM or at any other time of day.

When asked to describe her experience, Senator Clinton has cited a handful of international incidents where she says she played a central role. But any fair-minded and objective judge of these claims - i.e., by someone not affiliated with the Clinton campaign - would conclude that Senator Clinton's claims of foreign policy experience are exaggerated.

Northern Ireland:

Senator Clinton has said, "I helped to bring peace to Northern Ireland." It is a gross overstatement of the facts for her to claim even partial credit for bringing peace to Northern Ireland. She did travel to Northern Ireland, it is true. First Ladies often travel to places that are a focus of U.S. foreign policy. But at no time did she play any role in the critical negotiations that ultimately produced the peace. As the Associated Press recently reported, "[S]he was not directly involved in negotiating the Good Friday peace accord." With regard to her main claim that she helped bring women together, she did participate in a meeting with women, but, according to those who know best, she did not play a pivotal role. The person in charge of the negotiations, former Senator George Mitchell, said that "[The First Lady] was one of many people who participated in encouraging women to get involved, not the only one."

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News of Senator Clinton's claims has raised eyebrows across the ocean. Her reference to an important meeting at the Belfast town hall was debunked. Her only appearance at the Belfast City Hall was to see Christmas lights turned on. She also attended a 50-minute meeting which, according to the Belfast Daily Telegraph's report at the time, "[was] a little bit stilted, a little prepared at times." Brian Feeney, an Irish author and former politician, sums it up: "The road to peace was carefully documented, and she wasn't on it."

Bosnia:

Senator Clinton has pointed to a March 1996 trip to Bosnia as proof that her foreign travel involved a life-risking mission into a war zone. She has described dodging sniper fire. While she did travel to Bosnia in March 1996, the visit was not a high-stakes mission to a war zone. On March 26, 1996, the New York Times reported that "Hillary Rodham Clinton charmed American troops at a U.S.O. show here, but it didn't hurt that the singer Sheryl Crow and the comedian Sinbad were also on the stage."

Kosovo:

Senator Clinton has said, "I negotiated open borders to let fleeing refugees into safety from Kosovo." It is true that, as First Lady, she traveled to Macedonia and visited a Kosovar refugee camp. It is also true that she met with government officials while she was there. First Ladies frequently meet with government officials. Her claim to have "negotiated open borders to let fleeing refugees into safety from Kosovo," however, is not true. Her trip to Macedonia took place on May 14, 1999. The borders were opened the day before, on May 13, 1999.

The negotiations that led to the opening of the borders were accomplished by the people who ordinarily conduct negotiations with foreign governments - U.S. diplomats. President Clinton's top envoy to the Balkans, former Ambassador Robert Gelbard, said, "I cannot recall any involvement by Senator Clinton in this issue." Ivo Daalder worked on the Clinton Administration's National Security Council and wrote a definitive history of the Kosovo conflict. He recalls that "she had absolutely no role in the dirty work of negotiations."

Rwanda:

Last year, former President Clinton asserted that his wife pressed him to intervene with U.S. troops to stop the Rwandan genocide. When asked about this assertion, Hillary Clinton said it was true. There is no evidence, however, to suggest that this ever happened. Even those individuals who were advocating a much more robust U.S. effort to stop the genocide did not argue for the use of U.S. troops. No one recalls hearing that Hillary Clinton had any interest in this course of action. Based on a fair and thorough review of National Security Council deliberations during those tragic months, there is no evidence to suggest that U.S. military intervention was ever discussed. Prudence Bushnell, the Assistant Secretary of State with responsibility for Africa, has recalled that there was no consideration of U.S. military intervention.

At no time prior to her campaign for the presidency did Senator Clinton ever make the claim that she supported intervening militarily to stop the Rwandan genocide. It is noteworthy that she failed to mention this anecdote - urging President Clinton to intervene militarily in Rwanda - in her memoirs. President Clinton makes no mention of such a conversation with his wife in his memoirs. And Madeline Albright, who was Ambassador to the United Nations at the time, makes no mention of any such event in her memoirs.

Hillary Clinton did visit Rwanda in March 1998 and, during that visit, her husband apologized for America's failure to do more to prevent the genocide.

China

Senator Clinton also points to a speech that she delivered in Beijing in 1995 as proof of her ability to answer a 3 AM crisis phone call. It is strange that Senator Clinton would base her own foreign policy experience on a speech that she gave over a decade ago, since she so frequently belittles Barack Obama's speeches opposing the Iraq War six years ago. Let there be no doubt: she gave a good speech in Beijing, and she stood up for women's rights. But Senator Obama's opposition to the War in Iraq in 2002 is relevant to the question of whether he, as Commander-in-Chief, will make wise judgments about the use of military force. Senator Clinton's speech in Beijing is not.

Senator Obama's speech opposing the war in Iraq shows independence and courage as well as good judgment. In the speech that Senator Clinton says does not qualify him to be Commander in Chief, Obama criticized what he called "a rash war . . . a war based not on reason, but on passion, not on principle, but on politics." In that speech, he said prophetically: "[E]ven a successful war against Iraq will require a US occupation of undetermined length, at undetermined cost, with undetermined consequences." He predicted that a U.S. invasion of Iraq would "fan the flames of the Middle East," and "strengthen the recruitment arm of al Qaeda." He urged the United States first to "finish the fight with Bin Laden and al Qaeda."

If the U.S. government had followed Barack Obama's advice in 2002, we would have avoided one of the greatest foreign policy catastrophes in our nation's history. Some of the most "experienced" men in national security affairs - Vice President Cheney and Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and others - led this nation into that catastrophe. That lesson should teach us something about the value of judgment over experience. Longevity in Washington, D.C. does not guarantee either wisdom of judgment.

Conclusion:

The Clinton campaign's argument is nothing more than mere assertion, dramatized in a scary television commercial with a telephone ringing in the middle of the night. There is no support for or substance in the claim that Senator Clinton has passed "the Commander-in-Chief test." That claim - as the TV ad - consists of nothing more than making the assertion, repeating it frequently to the voters and hoping that they will believe it.

On the most critical foreign policy judgment of our generation - the War in Iraq - Senator Clinton voted in support of a resolution entitled "The Joint Resolution to Authorize the Use of U.S. Military Force Against Iraq." As she cast that vote, she said: "This is probably the hardest decision I have ever had to make -- any vote that may lead to war should be hard -- but I cast it with conviction." In this campaign, Senator Clinton has argued - remarkably - that she wasn't actually voting for war, she was voting for diplomacy. That claim is no more credible than her other claims of foreign policy experience. The real tragedy is that we are still living with the terrible consequences of her misjudgment. The Bush Administration continues to cite that resolution as its authorization - like a blank check - to fight on with no end in sight.

Barack Obama has a very simple case. On the most important commander in chief test of our generation, he got it right, and Senator Clinton got it wrong. In truth, Senator Obama has much more foreign policy experience than either Bill Clinton or Ronald Reagan had when they were elected. Senator Obama has worked to confront 21st century challenges like proliferation and genocide on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He possesses the personal attributes of a great leader - an even temperament, an open-minded approach to even the most challenging problems, a willingness to listen to all views, clarity of vision, the ability to inspire, conviction and courage.

And Barack Obama does not use false charges and exaggerated claims to play politics with national security.


After seven years of an energy policy written by and for the oil companies - with help from Dick Cheney - oil has now reached $107 a barrel - and gas prices in some areas are approaching $4 a gallon.

I understand Senator Obama is talking about energy today, right here in Pennsylvania. And that's great. But talking about problems is easy. Solving problems is hard. And speeches are no substitute for solutions. Speeches won't lower gas prices, stop climate change, or lessen our dependence on oil from Saudi Arabia.

The true test comes when it's time to match rhetoric with results. And unfortunately, we've seen that Senator Obama's promises and speeches are often just words.

On the campaign trail, Senator Obama talks about clean energy. But in the Senate, he voted for Dick Cheney's energy bill loaded with new tax breaks for oil companies. When he faced a tough choice, his support for a clean energy future turned out to be just words.

It's like how he talks about fixing NAFTA. But his top economic adviser assured the Canadian government that he wouldn't really follow through. His position? Just words.

Senator Obama promises to withdraw from Iraq within 16 months. But his top foreign policy adviser said he's not really going to rely on that plan. I guess that plan is just words, too.

We need a president who will solve problems. Who will fight for our families long after the speeches are over and the cameras are gone. That's the choice in this campaign: Solutions you can rely on - versus words you can't.


The Obama campaign has released an exhaustive memo on Hillary Clinton's foreign policy experience. They argue that Sen. Clinton's claim that she has passed a Commander-in-Chief threshold is "mere ass...
The Obama campaign has released an exhaustive memo on Hillary Clinton's foreign policy experience. They argue that Sen. Clinton's claim that she has passed a Commander-in-Chief threshold is "mere ass...
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- iPolitics I'm a Fan of iPolitics 33 fans permalink

It's sad when the Obama campaign has to do the media's job

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 PM on 03/11/2008

Bless you, Greg Craig. We want more of the same!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 03/11/2008
- JimArcata I'm a Fan of JimArcata 4 fans permalink
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Nicely crafted memo by the Obama team.

As I listen to the Clinton repeat the same "experience mantra" over and over, it become clear that they are try to create truths out of thin air. It is common political trickery. Sound bite half truths all the sudden become "the truth."

Obama needs to keep her honest, point out the real truth. Steer the media to the truth. (since they don't seem to want to find it themselves)

Hopefully the campaigning can get back to substance insted of exagerated resume building.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 03/11/2008

Hillary says she knows the world leaders from her time as first lady.
Uh, Hillary don't know if you've heard or not but those leaders are not longer
in office, they have new ones now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 AM on 03/11/2008
- Rotcod I'm a Fan of Rotcod 3 fans permalink

So Hillary's foreign policy experience is comparable to that of Sinbad's.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 AM on 03/11/2008
- lynnn I'm a Fan of lynnn 42 fans permalink

So McCain has more class than Hillary. Hmmm okay.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 AM on 03/11/2008

I have been on the Obama campaign for months to not cede the experience argument to HRC.
It has long sounded hollow to me. 35 years of what? She was a Goldwater repub and worked on his campaign. She was also the president of the the college republicans at Wellsley. She switched to being a dem when she met Bill. After she moved back to Arkansas she took a high paid job at the Rose Law firm representing corporations and sat on the board of Wal Mart.

She has exaggerated her experience (lied) as laid out in the post. McCain would have stomped on
her on this issue. Surprised it took Obama this long.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 AM on 03/11/2008
- sheisme I'm a Fan of sheisme 4 fans permalink

For all of you still touting Hillary as the most qualified ... I hope you read this CAREFULLY. A dishonest person is not a leader. A dishonest person is an ego wanting to be leader. Hillary Clinton's presidency would be like her candidacy has been ... deceitful and dishonest. For all of you still voting for Hillary ... Why do you want yet another president whose word cannot be trusted by either ourselves, our allies, or our enemies ...why do you want more Clinton years with the scandals that invariably will accompany them?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:52 AM on 03/11/2008

“The Hillary Hoax”, anyone working on the book yet?

It seems that many (if not most) supporters still clinging to the Clinton candidacy are doing it out of some sense of nostalgia—a focus on what should have been or could have been. A talented woman who SHOULD have been able to do great things; a woman who COULD have been the first “woman” president. But, what we’re finding out is that nostalgia is not enough to elect someone as President. We, the voters, are looking behind the curtain and either don’t find very much (e.g., real experience) or don’t like what we find (e.g., character, integrity, ethics). We are simply refusing to elect Hillary because it is “owed” to her or because she “waited in line” or simply because she is female. Imagine that, we’re actually trying to elect the best candidate.­..on merit, nonetheless. Oh, the horror.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:51 AM on 03/11/2008
- johnnyjust I'm a Fan of johnnyjust 6 fans permalink

Obama is supposed to be the Great Peacemaker who will bring all the world together. Yet the Democratic Party has never been more divided. Doesn't bode well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 03/11/2008

This is bad.....a mistake for sure. On two levels.

Sen. Obama has had the benefit of a kind of "collective amnesia"..­.... first of all due to the huge numbers of VERY YOUNG people who have become politically engaged this cycle and for whom politics HAS no historical context...­..and TO whom the ACTUAL FACTS of the The Bill Clinton administration are as unknown and remote in time as the civil war... He's had them buffaloed and it's in his interest to keep them that way.

Just because they are uninformed regarding the specifics of dusty history, with only a rough outline of what happened and in what order.....­.these young folks are HIGHLY capable of RAPIDLY PROCESSING this new information and drawing conclusions from it.
Obama runs the risk of making Sen. Clinton's "experience" case for her.....Wo­rse, by hair-splitting about how central Mrs. Clinton's role was or was not in a given achievment of that administration he:

A:) outlines the importance and CONTEXT of....say the Irish accords...­..or the epic battle with the insurance lobby over health care......­.and highlights Sen. Clinton's presense at the center of history (the most uninformed person imaginable will NOT be convinced that Mrs. Clinton was baking cookies and making tea at the time)

B:) Leaves himself open to potentially VERY unfavorable comparisons to what HE might have been doing at the time. The actual workings of Chicago politics are not likely to square with his high-minded general theme of hope and inclusion.­......and have in fact proved remarkably resiliant in retaining and old-style flavor whose central tenant remains...­."Show Meee 'Da MONEY!"...­.

In the largest sense,....­.. Obama is at his best as an inspirational speaker, and is ill-served by those advisers telling him to "take off the gloves" and climb down in that muddy trench and go toe-to-toe with his detractors. It's not where he's most comfortable, ...and he's not very good at it.

He likely ...(hopefu­lly?) .....never will be.....and if he DOES get good at it ...what then? ...

Anyone who saw the "new...tou­gh BHO" in Columbus, Miss. yesterday when he famously quashed suggestions regarding the V.P. slot ........an­d ungraciously made his case for rejecting the idea out-of-hand saw a very DIFFERENT kind of stump speech (different in that it was the SAME......­. ...the same as OTHER,more convention­al,....les­s inspiring politicians).

"I have more delegates than Sen. Clinton...­.. I've won twice as many states than my opponent..­......I, Sen. Clinton,.. ...I, ...my oppenent..­........ I,...I,..I­...I.....I­..........­....aye...­yi....yi!

Gone was the "WE"..... as in, the inspired:.­......"we are the change WE've been waiting for"
Gone was the "YOU".....­. as in, the galvanizing: ........."­This is (all) not because of me,....it'­s because of YOU".....

This new gritty, GRUBBY strategy does not serve Obama well and I urge him to abandon it, climb back out of the ditch onto the roadway...­.....no ......RUNW­AY,,,and ....FLY again (remembering to take US with him).

If he can't...or WON'T ....he will seem, to my mind, the very thing he can LEAST afford to appear....­..........­..........­...gulp,..­ORDINARY. Regards...­..........­..........­..........­..........­..........­..........­......tm

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 AM on 03/11/2008
- nazgul I'm a Fan of nazgul 10 fans permalink

NAILED IT!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 AM on 03/11/2008
- miles120 I'm a Fan of miles120 25 fans permalink
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We need much more of this from the Obama camp. It's okay to throw punches, as long as they're above the belt (which the Clinton campaign has not been doing.) As voters, we need to remain skeptical of what everyone asserts and insist that every important statement is examined thoroughly. This isn't entertainm­ent...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 AM on 03/11/2008
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Sticking to the facts and thoroughly presenting them is only good for those

interested enough to read the long list of charges and defenses. It is not

politically as effective as 30 second sound bites and smear jobs on TV.


We who pay attention, understand that there are little differences in their

voting and can only HOPE that Barack Obama will bring real CHANGE.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 AM on 03/11/2008

Yes, Obama is right on. Just keep calling Hillary's bluff. And stick to the facts.

http://lamarguerite.wordpress.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:45 AM on 03/11/2008
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